| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Magdalena Frech | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| McCartney Kessler | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which athlete will win the head-to-head matchup between Kessler and Frech; it matters because the outcome determines progression within the relevant tournament and shapes short-term market expectations about each competitor.
The event is a single sports matchup between two competitors listed as Kessler and Frech; context such as tournament level, round, and surface can materially change the competitive stakes. Historical meetings between the two, recent form, and any ranking or seeding implications give additional background that traders use to assess outcome expectations.
Market prices reflect the collective view of traders about who is more likely to win and update as new information (injuries, withdrawals, conditions) arrives. Treat prices as real-time signals to combine with independent research rather than as definitive forecasts.
This market typically offers the two binary outcomes: Kessler wins or Frech wins. Resolution is based on the official result reported by the event organizer and the exchange's settlement rules once the scheduled match has been completed or officially decided.
The close time is listed as TBD; the platform will publish a definitive close before trading begins. A TBD close means traders should monitor the event page for the announced cutoff because positions cannot be opened or closed after the market closes.
Settlement in cases of withdrawal, walkover or retirement follows the exchange's stated rules and the tournament's official reports. Depending on those rules, a walkover may be settled as a win for the opponent or the market may be voided—check the market-specific FAQ or rulebook for exact handling.
Monitor official warm-up and practice reports, injury and medical updates from teams or organizers, starting lineups if applicable, on-site weather, and last-minute travel or logistics news—these items often move expectations in the final hours before the match.
Use head-to-head results as context: consider recency, surface, margin of victory, and tournament importance. Small sample sizes or old matches should be weighted less heavily than recent competitive results on the same surface and tournament level.